Anthony Lane, reviewing the Dardenne
brothers’ new film, The Unknown Girl, in this week’s issue, mocks the documentary plainness of their work. He writes,
Holy moly, a Dardenne car chase! Purists may flinch, but the
rest of us are already looking forward to the brothers’ next film, Fast & Furious: Showdown in Seraing,
in which only Vin Diesel and his matte-black Corvette can get the lonely single
mother to the welfare office before it closes for lunch. ["Inquiring Minds"]
That line made me smile. It’s true that Dardenne movies lack visual extravagance. But that’s exactly what I like about them. They track the problems and troubles that afflict ordinary, yet particular individuals, and find the drama in that. As Christine Smallwood says, in her terrific “The In-Between World” (The New York Review of Books, May 10, 2012), a review of the Dardennes’ great The Kid with a Bike, “The Dardennes are interested in the everyday moral dramas of average people suffering and colliding and surviving within it.” That doesn’t mean their films are boring. Quite the opposite – they’re transfixing! Smallwood says of them, “These films are high-wire acts of dramatic irony.” I agree. I look forward to seeing The Unknown Girl.

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